Brewers Acquire Gerardo Parra

Parra, 27, is hitting .259/.305/.362 in 440 plate appearances this year, playing mostly right field for Arizona. Parra has typically posted stellar defensive metrics, though he’s been about average this year based on UZR and DRS. He has about $1.6MM remaining on his contract this year, and is arbitration eligible for 2015. A left-handed batter, Parra could enter something of a platoon with Khris Davis in left field. Or, he may just spell Davis, Carlos Gomez, and Ryan Braun as an oft-used fourth outfielder.

Haniger, 23, is hitting .255/.316/.416 in 271 plate appearances at Double-A this year. Baseball America rated Haniger the third-best prospect in the Brewers’ weak farm system prior to the season, calling him the team’s most advanced hitting prospect. The Brewers drafted Haniger 38th overall in 2012 as a supplemental draft pick for the loss of Prince Fielder. Banda, 20, is a southpaw starter with 83 2/3 innings at Low-A this year. Baseball America ranked him 27th among Brewers prospects prior to the season, though they say the team viewed him as a potential mid-rotation starter.

The Brewers farm has been routinely placed in the bottom five by almost every major “scouting” publication since the Sabathia deal. Nobody you’ve listed ever cracked the top 100 prior to this year, with the exception of Peralta. The point is their system gets little to no respect, and yet, somehow they manage to churn out MLB players at far better than average intervals. I’m starting to think maybe the scouting media might be more than a little off the mark, most of the time.

Why do you keep saying his value is 100% defense related like it means something? That’s like saying David Ortiz is a lousy player because his value is 100% offense related. It’s obviously more common to contribute offensively than defensively, but a run added is as valuable as a run saved.

Mitch Haniger was pretty worthless to the Brewers anyway. They have Khris Davis and Ryan Braun for a long time and Tyrone Taylor in the minors…who is way better than Hanover. Trade makes sense for both sides.

Solid return? Forget that Parra is certainly not a 4th outfielder on many teams (including the one that got him). He’s very clearly a starter for the Brewers. But they appear to have gotten two non-prospects. My apologies to Mr. Banda if that turns out to be not the case.

Not a fourth outfielder behind Gomez, Braun and Davis? Yeah. Look at the numbers, and then make that claim again. Defensively, he’s not a fourth outfielder on the Brewers, but there is a thing called “batting” in baseball.

I’ve seen you use “non-prospects” before, a term that makes little sense. All minor league players are “prospects” by definition. Some are just better prospects than others.

I disagree with your estimate of Parra being more than a 4th OF on “many teams”–and vehemently disagree with that claim in regards to the Brewers. And while there are certainly teams that Parra could start in the OF for (say, for example, the Cubs) that doesn’t mean he still isn’t a very replaceable part.

Parra a starter in the Milwaukee Brewer outfield? LOL. Not a chance in hell. He’s not starting ahead of Braun who’s top 10 in the NL in RBI, SLG and OPS. He’s not starting ahead of Gomez. And he’s certainly not starting ahead of Khris Davis. Since May 25th, which is 55 games, Davis is hitting .280 with 16 doubles, 11 home runs, and 38 RBIs with a .344/.535/.879 slash line. In 503 career at bats, Davis has 37 doubles and 28 home runs, and he’s getting better. Parra is a spot starter to give one of the other guys a day off.

Parra is a great all around player. He can beat a team with his bat, on the basepaths, with his defense and with his arm. And while a don’t see a lot of DBack games, I’ve seen him do all those things.

Like Duquette in Baltimore, Melvin is an old school baseball guy that let’s others chase after the sexy players and overpay them and/or overpay for them. Both of those gentlemen wait for the market to come to them.

As a Dbacks fan I don’t like it. Parra is a fan favorite who is having a down year with the bat. I will free up about $6 million to spend on SP and Peralta has played well and he will take the RF job. Still tough to see him go.

He’s having a down year with the bat? When did he have an “up” year with the bat? Because I’m looking at a guy that has never cracked .800 with his OPS. Last year, which I guess is about as “up” as he gets with the bat, he hit .268 with 43 doubles. But 100 strikeouts for 10 home runs is not a good ratio. He doesn’t have much power, he’s a God awful base stealer After stealing 15 out of 16 in 2011, he’s stolen 30 bases in 54 tries, a putrid 56% success ratio. He had a career .737 OPS coming into this season. His OPS + has cracked 100, which is average, once.

You guys that are crying now over the loss of Parra will forget this day if Haniger becomes the hitter I think he’s going to be. He had a rough start to this season, but he can rake. I was hoping that he was going to make a push for a roster spot next season. I think he can hit for about a .270-.275 average with about 25 home runs. He’s also got a plus arm. He should make for a good right fielder.

As a Dbacks fan I don’t like it. Parra is a fan favorite who is having a down year with the bat. I will free up about $6 million to spend on SP and Peralta has played well and he will take the RF job. Still tough to see him go.

I know parra was a fan favorite but i honestly dont mind the deal. Dont know who and how much salary will be paid by brewers but frees up a long jam in outfield for when pollock comes back. Trumbo, pollock and peralta who has done well with alfredo marte to fill in.